Home Users on a Survivable Branch Appliance or Server
Topic Last Modified: 2010-11-09
The process of homing users on a Survivable Branch Appliance or a Survivable Branch Server is similar to the process of homing users on a Microsoft Lync Server 2010 pool. Perform the Survivable Branch Appliance or Survivable Branch Server procedure at the central site.
To home users on Survivable Branch Appliance or Server
Before moving users to the Survivable Branch Server, open the Lync Server Management Shell, and then do all of the following:
Run the cmdlet Test-CsPstnOutboundCall to verify that the Survivable Branch Server is running and that the PSTN connectivity is configured. If you need to modify PSTN gateway properties, use the cmdlet Set-CsPstnGateway.
Run the cmdlet Get-CsVoicePolicy to verify that the users that will be homed on the Survivable Branch Server have the appropriate VoIP routing policy. If you need to modify the VoIP policy, use the cmdlet Set-CsVoicePolicy.
Run the cmdlet Get-CsVoicemailReroutingConfiguration to verify that the voice mail rerouting settings are configured. If you need to modify the voice mail rerouting settings, use the cmdlet Set-CsVoicemailReroutingConfiguration.
In the Lync Server Management Shell, run the cmdlet Move-CsUser cmdlet to home users.
Note
You can also use Microsoft Lync Server 2010 Control Panel to verify prerequisites and home users.
See Also
Other Resources
Test-CsPstnOutboundCall
Get-CsVoicePolicy
Get-CsVoicemailReroutingConfiguration
Move-CsUser